The King of Cats Sends a Postcard to His Wife

Keep your whiskers crisp and clean.

Do not let the mice grow lean.

Do not let yourself grow fat

like a common kitchen cat.

Have you set the kittens free?

Do they sometimes ask for me?

Is our catnip growing tall?

Did you patch the garden wall?

Clouds are gentle walls that hide

gardens on the other side.

Tell the tabby cats I take

all my meals with William Blake,

lunch at noon and tea at four,

served in splendor on the shore

at the tinkling of a bell.

Tell them I am sleeping well.

Tell them I have come so far,

brought by Blake’s celestial car,

buffeted by wind and rain,

I may not get home again.

Take this message to my friends.

Say the King of Catnip sends

to the cat who winds his clocks

a thousand sunsets in a box,

to the cat who brings the ice

the shadows of a dozen mice

(serve them with assorted dips

and eat them like potato chips),

and to the cat who guards his door

a net for catching stars, and more

(if with patience he abide):

catnip from the other side.